CTS Process Continues to Expand Product Pathways with Advancement to Military Grade Jet Fuel JP-8

July 20, 2016
Cellulosic biofuels using the CTS process can produce a jet fuel that is nearly 90% cleaner than conventional jet fuels and completely renewable.

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., July 19, 2016 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Alliance BioEnergy Plus, Inc. (OTCQB:ALLM) (the "Company"), is pleased to announce that as the scientific and engineering team at subsidiary Ek Laboratories continues to optimize the CTS process for dry distiller’s grain (DDG) and various other cellulose biomass, the team has developed a pathway to produce JP-8, an advanced military grade aviation biofuel, at the suggestion of government officials at the DOE and NREL.  Much like the commercial aviation fuel, Jet A-1 except with the addition of corrosion inhibitors and anti-icing additives in order to meet the stringent U.S. and British defense standards.

Aviation biofuels offer a variety of advantages over conventional petroleum based jet fuels.  Cellulosic biofuels using the CTS process can produce a jet fuel that is nearly 90% cleaner than conventional jet fuels and completely renewable.  The CTS process is capable of processing a wide variety of biomass including agricultural waste, residential and commercial yard waste as well as specialty crops into aviation biofuels at strategically placed locations near high traffic airports and military bases in order to reduce the transport and storage costs usually associated with aviation fuels being refined in faraway ports and trucked or railed all across the country.  CTS biofuels will be less expensive to create and transport, they do not depend on oil or commodities markets and can be produced in small batches at local airports from local feedstocks or in large factories outside of large metropolitan areas servicing the world’s busiest airlines.  

The Company is working closely with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and has submitted an application under the Department of Energy’s (DOE) funding request to build a commercial scale plant producing aviation biofuel from yard waste, pine chips and corn stover.        

Alliance BioEnergy is currently in discussions with several ethanol producers relating to its bolt-on CTS unit capable of processing DDG and other biomass while it continues meeting with potential territory and plant sub-licensees from around the world.  The CTS process is proving to be extremely versatile and capable of producing several different products from a variety of biomass feedstocks, at the same time.